Lea v. Hart

17 So. 593, 47 La. Ann. 1116, 1895 La. LEXIS 600
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 20, 1895
DocketNo. 11,760
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 17 So. 593 (Lea v. Hart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lea v. Hart, 17 So. 593, 47 La. Ann. 1116, 1895 La. LEXIS 600 (La. 1895).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Watkins, J.

Plaintiff seeks to recover of the defendantt he sum of five thousand dollars, the quantum, meruit value of services which he renderedto her ward, as attorney at law in the matter of the succession of her father — she being the sole surviving legal and forced heir of the deceased, and said services having enured to her benefit.

His claim mainly rests upon the hypothesis that: (1) He was instrumental in recovering for the minor an allowance of one thousand six hundred and twenty-five dollars, on the amount of the share which was coming to her from a former community; (2) in striking down and ridding the realty which was bequeathed to her by her father’s will, worth forty-five thousand dollars,of a lifetime usufruct which was asserted by the surviving widow of the deceased — the stepmother of the minor.

The defence is .threefold: (1) That the services of the grandfather of the minor, whom plaintiff represented, were ex gratia under the law, and placed upon the minor no legal obligation to pay for the services rendered by the plaintiff; (2) that the services rendered by the plaintiff were not beneficial to the minor, and accomplished nothing, of themselves, which would not have otherwise resulted; (3) that the amount claimed is excessive and oppressive.

On the trial these questions were thoroughly traversed by the litigants, and testimony pro and con adduced; and judgment was pronounced in favor of the plaintiff, and the defendant has appealed.

Junius Hart died on the 20th of September, 1898, and his estate was placed under administration on the 9th of October following. He left a will, by the terms of which, Lena Oecile Hart, a minor child and sole surviving forced heir, having been born of the second [1119]*1119marriage, was bequeathed the property known as No. 191 Oanal street, at the corner of Burgundy street, in the city of New Orleans, and his surviving widow, being of the third marriage, was bequeathed the balance of his estate and the usufruct of his share of the community property.

The will contained the further stipulation that the surviving widow should be the executrix, and one Washington P. Simpson tutor for the minor, and Dr. John J. Johnson alternate.

An estimative inventory was made and disclosed that the decedent’s estate aggregated one hundred and twenty-four thousand four hundred and two dollars and forty-three cents in value; and of this, fifty-four thousand five hundred dollars was attributed to real estate, and sixty-nine thousand nine hundred and two dollars and forty-three cents to the movable effects of various kinds.

The judge declined to confirm the appointment of Simpson as testamentary tutor to the minor, because he was a citizen of Georgia; and thereupon Wm. A. Arnold, as paternal grandfather of the child, acting on the advice of plaintiff as his counsel, presented a petition to the court praying to be appointed tutor, reciting the action of the court in failing to confirm the appointment of Simpson, and further alleging that Dr. Johnson, the alternate testamentary nominee for the tutorship, was likewise disqualified, being a citizen of Mississippi.

Soon afterward, Dr. Johnson appeared in court, petitioning for his confirmation as dative tutor, alleging himself to be a citizen of Louisiana.

To this application the grandfather filed an opposition, and prevented the issuance of letters of tutorship to him.

Subsequently the grandfather instituted proceedings and obtained a judicial sequestration of all the movable effects of the estate of the deceased, and had them taken by the sheriff out of the possession of one Julius Winter, to whom they had then been only recently confided by the surviving widow, under a power of attorney which conferred upon him unlimited powers of administration, and which specially authorized him “ to do and perform such acts connected with the administration of the estate of the decedent, as it was only competent for her as executrix, personally to perform,” etc. — the allegation of his petition being to the effect “that the said power of attorney was and is * * * intended to vest the said Juilus Win[1120]*1120ter with full authority to administer the affairs of the succession whether the executrix was present or absent.”

It was also alleged in the grandfather’s opposition to the appointment and confirmation of Dr. Johnson as tutor, that he had contemporaneously executed a similar procuration to Julius Winter, containing broader and more extensive powers.

About the same time, Simpson obtained an order of appeal from the decree of the judge, refusing to appoint him tutor.

A little later, the property sequestered was bonded and released to the surviving widow.

Subsequently, one John Booth made application to be appointed tutor to the minor, the petition having been signed by the same counsel who had appeared for the widow in the proceedings above related. Nothing came of all these applications, as the grandfather furnished the requisite bond and security, and his appointment was confirmed.

In the meantime the widow moved to dissolve the sequestration without avail, and she thereupon filed her answer, setting up claim that all the estate was property of the late community between herself and her deceased husband, except the premises, 191 on Canal street, and that, although it was purchased prior to their marriage, and on that account an asset of a previous community, yet same was paid for to the extent of twenty thousand dollars out of funds of the last community of which she was a member, and repaired also to the extent of eighteen thousand dollars, likewise with such community funds.

This claim in her answer was, in effect, to charge the separate estate of the deceased, that is, to say, the premises, 191 Oanal street, which had been bequeathed to the minor with a debt of thirty-eight thousand dollars in favor of the last community, of which the widow was owner of one-half, and usufructuary by will of the remaining one-half during the period of her natural life.

Soon afterward the widow petitioned to the court to allow her to adopt the minor, and to that end prayed for the appointment of a tutor ad hoc to consider her application. This appointment was opposed by the grandfather on various grounds, but his opposition proved of no avail, and the appointment was made, the adoption of the minor approved and consented. to, and the tutorship of the grandfather terminated.

[1121]*1121With the termination of the tutorship the sequestration proceedings ended, and the widow resumed the administration of the estate.

A few months later the widow filed her final account as executrix, on which she placed the minor as a creditor for the sum of five thousand dollars, as the net amount of cash due her from the former community, and as the owner of the premises 191 Canal street, subject to her testamentary usufruct, making claim for herself that she was, by the terms of the will, “ constituted residuary legatee and usufructuary for life of the aforesaid property bequeathed to the minor.”

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Related

Levin v. Suffrin
167 So. 911 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1936)
Titche v. Hiller
5 La. App. 375 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 So. 593, 47 La. Ann. 1116, 1895 La. LEXIS 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lea-v-hart-la-1895.